![]() 3rd String But Still On the Team |
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Education
Nancy
Salvato November 27, 2006 |
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Coaches must produce winning teams or they will be terminated. Managers must make their quotas or they will not be retained. Teachers must ensure that students…oh, wait a minute. Tenured teachers will receive an increase in salary every year based on their level of education and years in the classroom. Mike Antonucci, writing in the Education Intelligence Agency Communiqué says that, "Student enrollment in the United States will grow this school year by a total of 349,452 students (0.7 percent). The number of classroom teachers is expected to grow by 62,443 (2.0 percent).”1 This translates to, "one new teacher for every 5.5 new students.”2 Although most enrollments will be at the secondary school, "49,965 more elementary school teachers (2.8 percent),” are expected to be hired in our schools.3 "That's one new K-8 teacher for every 1.8 new K-8 students”.4 I’m left wondering how this can happen. Antonucci explains that there will be significant teacher turnover in the coming years through retirement and layoff of probationary teachers. Tenured teachers, in all likelihood, won’t be affected.5 Retirements and layoffs cannot be the only way to accommodate all these new teachers. There will have to be additional ways to add more staff. Almost
five years ago, Jay Greene, a Senior Fellow at the Manhattan
Institute for Policy Research co-wrote a piece about the effects of funding
incentives on special education enrollment. What he and his colleague
determined was that, "schools are increasingly diagnosing students as
disabled and placing them in special education for reasons unrelated to
those students’ genuine need for special education services.”6
Ample evidence seems to suggest that it is financially advantageous for a
school to label a child "special needs” because state and federal funding
can then pay the tab –provided the school is located in a bounty system
state. In other words, it is all about the money.7 "If a school
provides extra reading help to students who are falling behind in reading,
the school must bear that cost itself. But if the same school redefines
those students as learning disabled rather than slow readers, state and
federal government will help pick up the tab for those services.”8
In other words, tax payers will cough up more money to support education.
The bottom line, "The ever-accelerating growth of special education
enrollment is becoming an urgent problem for American education, drawing off
more and more billions of dollars that could otherwise be spent on better
education for all students.”9
Fast forward to the 2006-2007 school year. Dan Lips, an Education Analyst at the
Heritage Foundation and a Goldwater Institute Senior Fellow, writes that,
"Federal spending on elementary and secondary education has grown
dramatically over the past six years, increasing from $27 billion to $38
billion between 2001 and 2006. According to the U.S. Department of
Education, annual spending on the Title I program to assist disadvantaged
children grew by 45 percent during that same period. In 2007, the department
will spend 59 percent more on special education programs than it did in
2001.”10 More
and more federal and state money is being funneled to our public schools to
help disadvantaged and special education students. How is it possible that
there are so many more disadvantaged and special education students in
today’s classrooms? Well, the first question is the easiest to answer.
Because there are so many children from families who speak a native language
other than English; whose income levels reflect below minimum wage; who
enter school several grade levels behind; there are more disadvantaged
students in our schools. The second question implicates the "progressive
education” agenda which places "self esteem” ahead of academic achievement.
Progressive educational theory advocates prefer that students be graded
subjectively; not compared to other students. This is why standardized
tests are considered an anathema to good education. Students are taught to
read and do math by teachers using pedagogy based on ideology, not evidence
based methods. Most reading and writing in our public schools is narrative
and extensively researched papers are almost non existent. This contributes
to so many graduates of our public schools needing remediate courses in
reading, writing, and math.
Teachers utilizing progressive teaching methods are not held accountable for
ensuring that each student entering their classrooms makes a year’s academic
growth. Of course, if benchmarks are subjective, it’s impossible to
measure. Granted, when teachers are faced with students of radically
differing ability levels, it is difficult to provide each one of them a
sufficient amount of attention unless countless extra hours are put in
during their planning time or after school hours to bring these kids up to
speed. Even then, it depends on the diligence of the student to be willing
to spend extra time in that way. At any rate, efficiency is not part of the
progressive agenda. So
what do progressive schools do with the students who cannot meet subjective
benchmarks of education progress, regardless of the reason? The formula for
deciding if a student is eligible for special education is rather simple.
There has to be a discrepancy between ability and performance. If it is
significant, a child can be labeled as having a learning disability. After
this occurs, the child is not expected to accomplish as much learning in a
given amount of time. The standards by which this child is to be measured
are, in effect, "lowered”. In a
school with limited resources, instead of giving the child adequate time and
attention to catch up with his or her peers, the child falls further and
further behind. In a school district with adequate resources, the child is
enrolled in a resource room and given additional support through one on one
attention with a specialist or teacher’s aide who helps ensure that homework
and tests are understood and completed under less stressful circumstances.
Hopefully, as the child learns better study skills and achieves incremental
successes, there will be less need for "special education.” Obviously, a
severely disabled child will never be able to keep up with peers.
So
that’s it. As more and more students are labeled disadvantaged or special
needs, the federal and state government, I mean taxpayers, will provide
additional money to help ensure these students will receive the additional
support necessary to achieve an "adequate” amount of learning; "adequate”
being subjective. The question that must truly be considered is what is
being done to ensure that these "labeled” students will become independent
enough to succeed without additional resources? Can they eventually excel
in the "real” world? How much and what form of knowledge should be
accessible after 12 years of public education? What are the "real” world
expectations of these children?
Meanwhile, progressive schools of education continue to churn out more and
more teachers to meet their bottom line. The students aren’t the only ones
hurt by this. Although some "Newbies” will leave school prepared to teach
in shortage areas of Math, Science and Special Education, many will enter a
market which will not be nice to them. Some will be hired as classroom
aides. In effect, they will intern for a few years at salaries which
require them to work additional jobs to make ends meet. Others will find
jobs, but come to realize that after spending all that tuition money for a
specialized education, they really do not care for their chosen profession.
Still, more will be bounced around between schools as enrollments wane and
they suddenly find themselves without contracts to teach. Too much
accumulated experience will make them too expensive to hire. A fortunate
few will take positions in schools which offer them tenure. An even smaller
amount of them will end up at schools at which they love to work and also be
granted tenure. How
can this situation be reconciled? One way is to change schools of education
to reflect the standards used by medical and law schools. Another way is to
make schools compete for taxpayer dollars in a free market. A third
possibility is to alter teacher contracts to compensate teacher’s based on
students achieving standardized benchmarks, not based on tenure or
subjective evaluations. But that is proving an almost impossible row to
hoe. Unions
benefit the most when substantial numbers of teachers are employed; teachers
utilizing them as their sole bargaining agents and paying the requisite
union dues to be used to further a progressive political agenda. Therefore,
unions benefit from smaller class sizes designed to make it a little easier
to manage a heterogeneously grouped classroom and which require more
teachers. They benefit when contracts limit instructional time with
students and require more teachers. They benefit from a progressive
education agenda which emphasizes feelings more than successful teaching
strategies; in which kids are expected to learn in cooperative groups and in
heterogeneous classrooms. Progressive education virtually guarantees that
more students will be labeled "special education” and additional teachers
will be needed in non traditional or specialized capacities in order to meet
individual student’s learning needs.
Therefore, unions will continue to deliver the vote to school board members
that implement ideologically based teaching methodology which ensures that
many children will never reach their full academic potential. For those not
convinced, consider this: a progressive agenda is supposed to be about self
esteem; dictating that ability grouping and competition is bad. If that is
truly the case, how much worse it must be to be labeled a "special needs”
student. At least if you are 3rd string, you are still on the
team.
6-9
Effects of Funding Incentives on Special Education Enrollment |
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| Nancy Salvato is the President of Basics Project, a non-profit, non-partisan 501(C)(3) research and educational project whose mission is to promote the education of the American public on the basic elements of relevant political, legal and social issues important to our country... [read more] | |